BAMBOO ISLAND now out in the UK

Bamboo Island now out in paperback in the UK, is the second book in my South East Asian World War II trilogy published by Monsoon Books. It is the story of a British ex-pat, Juliet Crosby, a rubber planter’s wife who is caught up in the tragic events of the Japanese invasion of Malaya and Singapore. Read an extract from Chapter 1 on my websitehere

The book opens in 1962. Juliet has been living a reclusive life on her plantation since the Second World War robbed her of everyone she loved.

The sudden appearance of a young woman from Indonesia disrupts her lonely existence and stirs up unsettling memories. Together they embark on a journey to Singapore and to ‘Bamboo Island’ in Indonesia to uncover secrets buried for more than twenty years.

The idea for the trilogy came from researching my father’s wartime experiences. He was taken prisoner at the Fall of Singapore, worked on the Thai-Burma railway and survived the sinking of the hell-ship, Hofuko Maru, off the Philippines. In the course of my research, I read a lot about the Malaya campaign and the Fall of Singapore. I was struck by how the lives of everyone in the region were affected by the war and the Japanese occupation. I read horrific stories of massacres, of starvation, of unbelievable cruelty, but also amazing tales of sacrifice, hope and survival.

After I’d written Bamboo Heart, the story of Tom Ellis a prisoner on the Death
Railway, I wanted to go back to that time and place to write about the effect of the war and occupation from a different perspective. I chose to write from the viewpoint of an ordinary woman who had made a life in Malaya, but whose life was transformed by the war.

I wanted to show how the war engulfed the region, how it destroyed families and lives.

It was important, though, for my central character, Juliet, to be involved in her own personal struggle before the invasion changed everything.

In the 1930s, Juliet travels from London to Penang with her sister Rose, initially for a visit, but both soon decide to settle in Malaya.

Juliet marries a rubber planter and goes to live with him on his estate, but she quickly discovers that all is not quite as might first have appeared. Her life is already in turmoil when war breaks out.

Through Juliet’s eyes the reader witnesses the horrors of the Japanese occupation, the Alexandra hospital massacre, the sook ching (elimination by purification) and the brutal treatment of internees in Changi. The sinking of the civilian transport ship, the Vyner Brooke, and the massacre of survivors on a beach on Bangka Island off Sumatra was the inspiration for the sinking of a fictitious ship (the Rajah of Sarawak) which is central to the plot of Bamboo Island. In fact Banka Island is the real-life inspiration for the fictional Bamboo Island in the book.

My aim (as in Bamboo Heart) was to bring the dreadful events of that period to life through the story of one character.

I’ve traveled a fair amount in far flung outposts of the former British empire since my first trip from Bangkok to Bali in 1985. I stayed in crumbling guesthouses in India, Burma, Sri Lanka and Malaysia which would once have been the sumptuous homes of British ex-pats. These places kindled my interest in the people who, in the days of empire, traveled half way across the world to make a new life in the East. That’s how Juliet first came into my mind – sitting on the veranda of her decaying house, looking back over the years, thinking about the people she loved and lost, and how the war and the Japanese occupation transformed her life…